The Manila Times

BITCOIN PLUNGES AS INVESTORS CASH OUT

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TOKYO: Bitcoin prices plunged by a quarter on Friday as investors cashed out just before Christmas after the wildly volatile currency’s stratosphe­ric rise in recent weeks.

The precipitou­s drop comes after a series of warnings by analysts and government­s about a bubble that could burst at any moment as investors, many inexperien­ced, piled into the unit hoping to enjoy some of the eye-watering gains.

The controvers­ial cryptocurr­ency fell to $ 12,191 from its Thursday price of $16,563.

It is down almost 40 percent down from its record high of $ 19,500 seen on Monday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The sell-off has bled through to other cryptocurr­encies such as Dash, Litecoin and Ripple, all of which were sent plunging.

Stephen Innes, head of trading - vestors are having a “reality check”.

He added: “At the heart of the matter was a frenzied demand for coins with limited supply has now led to unsophisti­cated investors holding the bag at the top.”

At its height, Bitcoin had soared almost 30-fold since the start of the year and has moved into the exchanges began trading futures in the unit.

And the mania that has swept the Bitcoin universe saw a New announce it was shifting into cryptocurr­ency-related investment­s.

Long Island Iced Tea Corp of says it currently produces the soft drink with a proprietar­y recipe -- said on Thursday it was changing its name to “Long Blockchain Corp” and would explore investment­s in the technology underlying cryptocurr­encies.

Shares in the firm rose 180 percent on the tech-rich Nasdaq following the news.

Bitcoin began looking shaky on Wednesday when it took a 15- percent hit following news to say it will close and start bankruptcy proceeding­s. South Korea and Japan are home to some of the largest number of traders in the currency.

trading in a popular Bitcoin-related stock, citing concerns about market manipulati­on.

The Crypto Company’s share price had risen 1,700 percent between the end of September and Monday evening before the Securities Exchange Commission intervened to halt trades until January 4.

There have been numerous warnings about a possible blowout in the Bitcoin market.

Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said on Thursday that the price surge of the virtual currency was “abnormal”, while Singapore’s central bank advised investors to “act with extreme caution”.

The vice-president of the European Central Bank has also expressed concern about the relentless rise in the value of Bitcoin and the potential risk accompanyi­ng the trend.

money and called on banks to be certain their digital currency transactio­ns adhere to anti-money laundering statutes.

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